LIGHTNING PLAYED along the black ridges above
them, and below was a sheer drop to a river which was only a silver
thread. Under their boots, man-made and yet dominating the wildness
of jungle and mountain, was a platform of rock slabs, fused to
support a palace of towering yellow-white walls and curved cups of
domes, a palace which was also half fortress, half frontier
post.
Dane set his hands on the parapet of the river drop, blinked as
a lightning bolt crackled in a sky-splitting glare of violet fire.
This was about as far from the steaming islands of Xecho as a man
could imagine.
“The demon graz prepare for battle.” Asaki nodded
toward the distant crackling.
Captain Jellico laughed. “Supposed to be whetting their
tusks, eh? I wouldn’t care to meet a graz that could produce
such a display by mere tusk whetting.”
“No? But think of the reward for the tracker who discovers
where such go to die. To find the graveyard of the graz herds would
make any man wealthy beyond dreams.”
“How much truth is there in that legend?” Tau
asked.
The Chief Ranger shrugged. “Who can say? This much is
true: I have served my life in the forests since I could walk. I
have listened to the talk of Trackers, Hunters, Rangers in my
father’s courtyards and field camps since I could understand
their words. Yet never has any man reported the finding of a body
of a graz that died a natural death. The scavengers might well
account for the bulk of flesh, but the tusks and the bones should
be visible for years. And this, too, I have seen with my own eyes:
a graz close to death, supported by two of its kind and being urged
along to the big swamps. Perhaps it is only that the suffering animal longs for
water at its end, or perhaps in the heart of that morass there does
lie the graz graveyard. But no man has found a naturally dead graz,
nor has any returned from exploring the big swamps . . . .”
Lightning on peaks which were like polished jet—bare rock
above, the lush overgrowth of jungle below. And between, this
fortress held by men who dared both the heights and the depths. The
wildly burgeoning life of Khatka had surrounded the off-worlders
since they had come here. There was something untameable about
Khatka; the lush planet lured and yet repelled at the same
time.
“Zoboru far from here?”
The Chief Ranger pointed north in answer to the captain’s
question.
“About a hundred leagues. It is the first new preserve we
have prepared in ten years. And it is our desire to make it the
best for tri-dee hunters. That is why we are now operating taming
teams—”
“Taming teams?” Dane had to ask.
The Chief Ranger was ready enough to discuss his project.
“Zoboru is a no-kill preserve. The animals, they come to
learn that after a while. But we cannot wait several years until
they do. So we make them gifts.” He laughed, evidently
recalling some incident. “Sometimes, perhaps, we are too
eager. Most of our visitors who wish to make tri-dees want to
picture big game—graz, amplet, rock apes,
lions—”
“Lions?” echoed Dane.
“Not Terran lions, no. But my people, when they landed on
Khatka, found a few animals that reminded them of those they had
always known. So they gave those the same names. A Khatkan lion is
furred, it is a hunter and a great fighter, but it is not
the cat of Terra. However, it is in great demand as a tri-dee
actor. So we summon it out of lurking by providing free meals. One
shoots a poli, a water rat, or a lan-deer and drags the carcass
behind a low-flying flitter. The lion springs upon the moving meat, which it can also scent, and
the rope is cut, leaving a free dinner.
“The lions are not stupid. In a very short time they
connect the sound of a flitter cutting the air with food. So they
come to the banquet and those on the flitter can take their tri-dee
shots at ease. Only there must also be care taken in such training.
One forest guard on the Komog preserve became too enterprising. He
dragged his kill at first. Then, to see if he could get the lions
to forget man’s presence entirely, he hung the training
carcasses on the flitter, encouraging them to jump for their
food.
“For the guard that was safe enough, but it worked too too
well. A month or so later a Hunter was escorting a client through
Komog and they swung low to get a good picture of a water rat
emerging from the river. Suddenly there was a snarl behind them and
they found themselves sharing the flitter with a lioness annoyed at
finding no meat waiting on board.
“Luckily, they both wore stass belts, but they had to land
the flitter and leave until the lioness wandered off, and she
seriously damaged the machine in her irritation. So now our guards
play no more fancy tricks while on taming runs.
Tomorrow—no,” he corrected himself, “the day
after tomorrow I will be able to show you how the process
works.”
“And tomorrow?” inquired the captain.
“Tomorrow my men make hunting magic.” Asaki’s
voice was expressionless.
“Your chief witch doctor being?” questioned Tau.
“Lumbrilo.” The Chief Ranger did not appear disposed
to add to that but Tau pursued the subject.
“His office is hereditary?”
“Yes. Does that make any difference?” For the first
time there was a current of repressed eagerness in the
other’s tone.
“Perhaps a vast amount of difference,” Tau replied.
“A hereditary office may carry with it two forms of
conditioning, one to influence its holder, one to affect the public-at-large.
Your Lumbrilo may have come to believe deeply in his own powers; he
would be a very remarkable man if he did not. It is almost certain
that your people unquestionably accept him as a worker of
wonders?”
“They do so accept,” Once more Asaki’s voice
was drained of life.
“And Lumbrilo does not accept something you believe
necessary?”
“Again the truth, Medic. Lumbrilo does not accept his
proper place in the scheme of things!”
“He is a member of one of your Five Families?”
“No, his clan is small, always set apart. From the
beginning here those who spoke for gods and demons did not also
order men.”
“Separation of church and state,” commented Tau
thoughtfully. “Yet in our Terran past there have been times
when church and state were one. Does Lumbrilo desire
that?”
Asaki raised his eyes to the mountain peaks, to the northward
where lay his beloved work.
“I do not know what Lumbrilo wants, save that it makes
mischief—or worse! This I tell you: hunting magic is part of
our lives and it has at its core some of those unexplainable
happenings which you have acknowledged do exist. I have used powers
I can neither explain nor understand as part of my work. In the
jungle and on the grasslands an off-worlder must guard his life
with a stass belt if he goes unarmed. But I—any of my
men—can walk unharmed if we obey the rules of our magic. Only
Lumbrilo does other things which his forefathers did not. And he
boasts that he can do more. So he has a growing following of those
who believe—and those who fear.”
“You want me to face him?”
The Chief Ranger’s big hands closed upon the rim of the
parapet as if they could exert enough pressure to crumble the hard
stone. “I want you to see whether there is trickery in this. Trickery I can fight, for that there are weapons.
But if Lumbrilo truly controls forces for which there is no name,
then perhaps we must patch up an uneasy peace—or go down in
defeat. And, off-worlder, I come from a line of warriors—we
do not drink defeat easily!”
“That I also believe,” Tau returned quietly.
“Be sure, sir, if there is trickery in this man’s magic
and I can detect it, the secret shall be yours.”
“Let us hope that so it shall be.”
Subconsciously, Dane had always associated the practice of magic
with darkness and the night. But the next morning the sun was high
and hot when he made one of the party coming down to a second and
larger walled terrace where the Hunters, Trackers, Guards and other
followers of the Chief Ranger was assembled in irregular rows.
There was a low sound which was more a throb in the clear air
about them, getting into a man’s blood and pumping in rhythm
there. Dane tracked the sound to its source: four large drums
standing waist high before the men who tapped them delicately with
the tips of all ten fingers.
The necklaces of claws and teeth about those dusky throats, the
kilts of fringed hide, the crossed belts of brilliantly spotted or
striped fur were in contrast to the very efficient and modern side
arms each man wore, to the rest of the equipment sheathed and
strapped at their belts.
There was a carved stool for the Chief Ranger, another for
Captain Jellico. Dane and Tau settled themselves on the less
comfortable seats of the terrace steps. Those tapping fingers
increased their rate of beat, and the notes of the drums rose from
the low murmur of hived bees to the mutter of mountain thunder
still half a range away. A bird called from those inner courts of
the palace from which the women never ventured.
Da—da—da—da . . . Voices took up the thud-thud
of the drums, the heads of the squatting men moved in a slow swing
from side to side. Tau’s hand closed about Dane’s wrist
and the younger man looked around, startled, to see that the
medic’s eyes were alight, that he was watching the assembly
with the alertness of Sinbad approaching prey.
“Calculate the stowage space in Number One
hold!”
That amazing order, delivered in a whisper, shocked Dane into
obeying it. Number One hold . . . there were three divisions now
and the stowage was—He became aware that for a small space of
time he had escaped the net being woven by the beat of the drum,
the drone of voices, the nodding of heads. He moistened his lips.
So that was how it worked! He had heard Tau speak often enough
about self-hypnotism under such conditions, but this was the first
time the meaning of it had been clear.
Two men were shuffling out of nowhere, wearing nothing on their
dark bodies but calf-length kilts of tails, black tails with fluffy
white tips, which swayed uniformly in time to their pacing feet.
Their heads and shoulders were masked by beautifully cured and
semi-mounted animal heads displaying half-open jaws with double
pairs of curved fangs. The black-and-white striped fur, the sharply
pointed ears, were neither canine nor feline, but a weird
combination of the two.
Dane gabbled two trading formulas under his breath and tried to
think of the relation of Samantine rock coinage to galactic
credits. Only this time his defenses did not work. From between the
two shuffling dancers padded something on four feet. The
canine-feline creature was more than just a head; it was a
loose-limbed, graceful body fully eight feet in length, and the red
eyes in the prick-eared head were those of a confident killer. It
walked without restraint, lazily, with arrogance, its white-tufted
tail swinging. And when it reached the mid-point of the terrace, it
flung up its head as if to challenge. But words issued from between
those curved fangs, words which Dane might not understand but which
undoubtedly held meaning for the men nodding in time to the
hypnotic cadence of that da—da—da . . .
”Beautiful!” Tau spoke in honest admiration, his own
eyes almost as feral as those of the talking beast as he leaned
forward, his fists on his knees.
Now the animal was dancing also, its paws following the pace set
by the masked attendants. It must be a man in an animal skin. But
Dane could hardly believe that. The illusion was too perfect. His
own hands went to the knife sheath at his belt. Out of deference to
local custom they had left their stun rods in the palace, but a
belt knife was an accepted article of apparel. Dane slid the blade
out surreptitiously, setting its point against the palm of his hand
and jabbing painfully. This was another of Tau’s answers for
breaking a spell. But the white and black creature continued to
dance; there was no blurring of its body lines into those of a
human being.
It sang on in a high-pitched voice, and Dane noted that those of
the audience nearest the stools where Asaki and the captain were
seated now watched the Chief Ranger and the space officer. He felt
Tau tense beside him.
“Trouble coming . . . ” The warning from Tau was the
merest thread of sound. Dane forced himself to look away from the
swaying cat-dog, to watch instead the singers who were now
furtively eying their lord and his guest. The Terran knew that
there were feudal bonds between the Ranger and his men. But suppose
this was a showdown between Lumbrilo and Asaki—whose side
would these men take?
He watched Captain Jellico’s hand slide across his knee,
his fingers drop in touching distance of knife hilt. And the hand
of the Chief Ranger, hanging lax at his side, suddenly balled into
a fist.
“So!” Tau expelled the word as a hiss. He moved with
surefooted speed. Now he passed between the stools to confront the
dancing cat-dog. Yet he did not look at that weird creature and its
attendants. Instead his arms were flung high as if to ward
off—or perhaps welcome—something on the mountain side
as he shouted: “Hodi, eldama! Hodi!”
As one, those on the terrace turned, looked up toward the slope.
Dane was on his feet, holding his knife as he might a sword. Though
of what use its puny length would be against that huge bulk moving
in slow majesty toward them, he did not try to think.
Gray-dark trunk curled upward between great ivory tusks, ears
went wide as ponderous feet crunched volcanic soil. Tau moved
forward, his hands still upraised, clearly in greeting. That trunk
touched skyward as if in salute to the man who could be crushed
under one foot. “Hodi, eldama!” For the second time Tau
hailed the monster elephant and the trunk raised in silent greeting
from one lord of an earth to another he recognized as an equal.
Perhaps it had been a thousand years since man and elephant had
stood so, and then there had been only war and death between them.
Now there was peace and a current of power flowing from one to the
other. Dane sensed this, saw the men on the terrace likewise
drawing back from the unseen tie between the medic and the bull he
had so clearly summoned.
Then Tau’s upheld hands came together in a sharp clap and
men held their breath in wonder. Where the great bull had stood
there was nothing—except rocks in the sun.
As Tau swung around to face the cat-dog, that creature had no
substance either. For he fronted no animal but a man, a small, lean
man whose lips wrinkled back from his teeth in a snarl. His
attendant priests fell back, leaving the spaceman and the witch
doctor alone.
“Lumbrilo’s magic is great,” Tau said evenly.
“I hail Lumbrilo of Khatka.” His hand made the
open-palmed salute of peace.
The snarl faded as the man brought his face under control. He
stood naked, but he was clothed in inherit dignity. And there was
power with that dignity, power and a pride before which even the more physically impressive Chief Ranger might
have to give place.
“You have magic also, outlander,” he replied.
“Where walks this long-toothed shadow of yours
now?”
“Where once the men of Khatka walked, Lumbrilo. For it was
men of your blood who long, long past hunted this shadow of mine
and made its body their prey.”
“So that it now might have a blood debt to settle with us,
outlander?”
“That you said, not I, man of power. You have shown us one
beast, I have shown another. Who can say which of them is stronger
when it issues forth from the shadows?”
Lumbrilo pattered forward, his bare feet making little sound on
the stones of the terrace. Now he was only an arm’s-length
away from the medic.
“You have challenged me, off-world man.” Was that a
question or a statement? Dane wondered.
“Why should I challenge you, Lumbrilo? To each race its
own magic. I come not to offer battle.” His eyes
held steady with the Khatkan’s.
“You have challenged me.” Lumbrilo turned away and
then looked back over his shoulder. “The strength you depend
upon may become a broken staff, off-worlder. Remember my
words in the time when shadows become substance, and substance the
thinnest of shadows!”
LIGHTNING PLAYED along the black ridges above
them, and below was a sheer drop to a river which was only a silver
thread. Under their boots, man-made and yet dominating the wildness
of jungle and mountain, was a platform of rock slabs, fused to
support a palace of towering yellow-white walls and curved cups of
domes, a palace which was also half fortress, half frontier
post.
Dane set his hands on the parapet of the river drop, blinked as
a lightning bolt crackled in a sky-splitting glare of violet fire.
This was about as far from the steaming islands of Xecho as a man
could imagine.
“The demon graz prepare for battle.” Asaki nodded
toward the distant crackling.
Captain Jellico laughed. “Supposed to be whetting their
tusks, eh? I wouldn’t care to meet a graz that could produce
such a display by mere tusk whetting.”
“No? But think of the reward for the tracker who discovers
where such go to die. To find the graveyard of the graz herds would
make any man wealthy beyond dreams.”
“How much truth is there in that legend?” Tau
asked.
The Chief Ranger shrugged. “Who can say? This much is
true: I have served my life in the forests since I could walk. I
have listened to the talk of Trackers, Hunters, Rangers in my
father’s courtyards and field camps since I could understand
their words. Yet never has any man reported the finding of a body
of a graz that died a natural death. The scavengers might well
account for the bulk of flesh, but the tusks and the bones should
be visible for years. And this, too, I have seen with my own eyes:
a graz close to death, supported by two of its kind and being urged
along to the big swamps. Perhaps it is only that the suffering animal longs for
water at its end, or perhaps in the heart of that morass there does
lie the graz graveyard. But no man has found a naturally dead graz,
nor has any returned from exploring the big swamps . . . .”
Lightning on peaks which were like polished jet—bare rock
above, the lush overgrowth of jungle below. And between, this
fortress held by men who dared both the heights and the depths. The
wildly burgeoning life of Khatka had surrounded the off-worlders
since they had come here. There was something untameable about
Khatka; the lush planet lured and yet repelled at the same
time.
“Zoboru far from here?”
The Chief Ranger pointed north in answer to the captain’s
question.
“About a hundred leagues. It is the first new preserve we
have prepared in ten years. And it is our desire to make it the
best for tri-dee hunters. That is why we are now operating taming
teams—”
“Taming teams?” Dane had to ask.
The Chief Ranger was ready enough to discuss his project.
“Zoboru is a no-kill preserve. The animals, they come to
learn that after a while. But we cannot wait several years until
they do. So we make them gifts.” He laughed, evidently
recalling some incident. “Sometimes, perhaps, we are too
eager. Most of our visitors who wish to make tri-dees want to
picture big game—graz, amplet, rock apes,
lions—”
“Lions?” echoed Dane.
“Not Terran lions, no. But my people, when they landed on
Khatka, found a few animals that reminded them of those they had
always known. So they gave those the same names. A Khatkan lion is
furred, it is a hunter and a great fighter, but it is not
the cat of Terra. However, it is in great demand as a tri-dee
actor. So we summon it out of lurking by providing free meals. One
shoots a poli, a water rat, or a lan-deer and drags the carcass
behind a low-flying flitter. The lion springs upon the moving meat, which it can also scent, and
the rope is cut, leaving a free dinner.
“The lions are not stupid. In a very short time they
connect the sound of a flitter cutting the air with food. So they
come to the banquet and those on the flitter can take their tri-dee
shots at ease. Only there must also be care taken in such training.
One forest guard on the Komog preserve became too enterprising. He
dragged his kill at first. Then, to see if he could get the lions
to forget man’s presence entirely, he hung the training
carcasses on the flitter, encouraging them to jump for their
food.
“For the guard that was safe enough, but it worked too too
well. A month or so later a Hunter was escorting a client through
Komog and they swung low to get a good picture of a water rat
emerging from the river. Suddenly there was a snarl behind them and
they found themselves sharing the flitter with a lioness annoyed at
finding no meat waiting on board.
“Luckily, they both wore stass belts, but they had to land
the flitter and leave until the lioness wandered off, and she
seriously damaged the machine in her irritation. So now our guards
play no more fancy tricks while on taming runs.
Tomorrow—no,” he corrected himself, “the day
after tomorrow I will be able to show you how the process
works.”
“And tomorrow?” inquired the captain.
“Tomorrow my men make hunting magic.” Asaki’s
voice was expressionless.
“Your chief witch doctor being?” questioned Tau.
“Lumbrilo.” The Chief Ranger did not appear disposed
to add to that but Tau pursued the subject.
“His office is hereditary?”
“Yes. Does that make any difference?” For the first
time there was a current of repressed eagerness in the
other’s tone.
“Perhaps a vast amount of difference,” Tau replied.
“A hereditary office may carry with it two forms of
conditioning, one to influence its holder, one to affect the public-at-large.
Your Lumbrilo may have come to believe deeply in his own powers; he
would be a very remarkable man if he did not. It is almost certain
that your people unquestionably accept him as a worker of
wonders?”
“They do so accept,” Once more Asaki’s voice
was drained of life.
“And Lumbrilo does not accept something you believe
necessary?”
“Again the truth, Medic. Lumbrilo does not accept his
proper place in the scheme of things!”
“He is a member of one of your Five Families?”
“No, his clan is small, always set apart. From the
beginning here those who spoke for gods and demons did not also
order men.”
“Separation of church and state,” commented Tau
thoughtfully. “Yet in our Terran past there have been times
when church and state were one. Does Lumbrilo desire
that?”
Asaki raised his eyes to the mountain peaks, to the northward
where lay his beloved work.
“I do not know what Lumbrilo wants, save that it makes
mischief—or worse! This I tell you: hunting magic is part of
our lives and it has at its core some of those unexplainable
happenings which you have acknowledged do exist. I have used powers
I can neither explain nor understand as part of my work. In the
jungle and on the grasslands an off-worlder must guard his life
with a stass belt if he goes unarmed. But I—any of my
men—can walk unharmed if we obey the rules of our magic. Only
Lumbrilo does other things which his forefathers did not. And he
boasts that he can do more. So he has a growing following of those
who believe—and those who fear.”
“You want me to face him?”
The Chief Ranger’s big hands closed upon the rim of the
parapet as if they could exert enough pressure to crumble the hard
stone. “I want you to see whether there is trickery in this. Trickery I can fight, for that there are weapons.
But if Lumbrilo truly controls forces for which there is no name,
then perhaps we must patch up an uneasy peace—or go down in
defeat. And, off-worlder, I come from a line of warriors—we
do not drink defeat easily!”
“That I also believe,” Tau returned quietly.
“Be sure, sir, if there is trickery in this man’s magic
and I can detect it, the secret shall be yours.”
“Let us hope that so it shall be.”
Subconsciously, Dane had always associated the practice of magic
with darkness and the night. But the next morning the sun was high
and hot when he made one of the party coming down to a second and
larger walled terrace where the Hunters, Trackers, Guards and other
followers of the Chief Ranger was assembled in irregular rows.
There was a low sound which was more a throb in the clear air
about them, getting into a man’s blood and pumping in rhythm
there. Dane tracked the sound to its source: four large drums
standing waist high before the men who tapped them delicately with
the tips of all ten fingers.
The necklaces of claws and teeth about those dusky throats, the
kilts of fringed hide, the crossed belts of brilliantly spotted or
striped fur were in contrast to the very efficient and modern side
arms each man wore, to the rest of the equipment sheathed and
strapped at their belts.
There was a carved stool for the Chief Ranger, another for
Captain Jellico. Dane and Tau settled themselves on the less
comfortable seats of the terrace steps. Those tapping fingers
increased their rate of beat, and the notes of the drums rose from
the low murmur of hived bees to the mutter of mountain thunder
still half a range away. A bird called from those inner courts of
the palace from which the women never ventured.
Da—da—da—da . . . Voices took up the thud-thud
of the drums, the heads of the squatting men moved in a slow swing
from side to side. Tau’s hand closed about Dane’s wrist
and the younger man looked around, startled, to see that the
medic’s eyes were alight, that he was watching the assembly
with the alertness of Sinbad approaching prey.
“Calculate the stowage space in Number One
hold!”
That amazing order, delivered in a whisper, shocked Dane into
obeying it. Number One hold . . . there were three divisions now
and the stowage was—He became aware that for a small space of
time he had escaped the net being woven by the beat of the drum,
the drone of voices, the nodding of heads. He moistened his lips.
So that was how it worked! He had heard Tau speak often enough
about self-hypnotism under such conditions, but this was the first
time the meaning of it had been clear.
Two men were shuffling out of nowhere, wearing nothing on their
dark bodies but calf-length kilts of tails, black tails with fluffy
white tips, which swayed uniformly in time to their pacing feet.
Their heads and shoulders were masked by beautifully cured and
semi-mounted animal heads displaying half-open jaws with double
pairs of curved fangs. The black-and-white striped fur, the sharply
pointed ears, were neither canine nor feline, but a weird
combination of the two.
Dane gabbled two trading formulas under his breath and tried to
think of the relation of Samantine rock coinage to galactic
credits. Only this time his defenses did not work. From between the
two shuffling dancers padded something on four feet. The
canine-feline creature was more than just a head; it was a
loose-limbed, graceful body fully eight feet in length, and the red
eyes in the prick-eared head were those of a confident killer. It
walked without restraint, lazily, with arrogance, its white-tufted
tail swinging. And when it reached the mid-point of the terrace, it
flung up its head as if to challenge. But words issued from between
those curved fangs, words which Dane might not understand but which
undoubtedly held meaning for the men nodding in time to the
hypnotic cadence of that da—da—da . . .
”Beautiful!” Tau spoke in honest admiration, his own
eyes almost as feral as those of the talking beast as he leaned
forward, his fists on his knees.
Now the animal was dancing also, its paws following the pace set
by the masked attendants. It must be a man in an animal skin. But
Dane could hardly believe that. The illusion was too perfect. His
own hands went to the knife sheath at his belt. Out of deference to
local custom they had left their stun rods in the palace, but a
belt knife was an accepted article of apparel. Dane slid the blade
out surreptitiously, setting its point against the palm of his hand
and jabbing painfully. This was another of Tau’s answers for
breaking a spell. But the white and black creature continued to
dance; there was no blurring of its body lines into those of a
human being.
It sang on in a high-pitched voice, and Dane noted that those of
the audience nearest the stools where Asaki and the captain were
seated now watched the Chief Ranger and the space officer. He felt
Tau tense beside him.
“Trouble coming . . . ” The warning from Tau was the
merest thread of sound. Dane forced himself to look away from the
swaying cat-dog, to watch instead the singers who were now
furtively eying their lord and his guest. The Terran knew that
there were feudal bonds between the Ranger and his men. But suppose
this was a showdown between Lumbrilo and Asaki—whose side
would these men take?
He watched Captain Jellico’s hand slide across his knee,
his fingers drop in touching distance of knife hilt. And the hand
of the Chief Ranger, hanging lax at his side, suddenly balled into
a fist.
“So!” Tau expelled the word as a hiss. He moved with
surefooted speed. Now he passed between the stools to confront the
dancing cat-dog. Yet he did not look at that weird creature and its
attendants. Instead his arms were flung high as if to ward
off—or perhaps welcome—something on the mountain side
as he shouted: “Hodi, eldama! Hodi!”
As one, those on the terrace turned, looked up toward the slope.
Dane was on his feet, holding his knife as he might a sword. Though
of what use its puny length would be against that huge bulk moving
in slow majesty toward them, he did not try to think.
Gray-dark trunk curled upward between great ivory tusks, ears
went wide as ponderous feet crunched volcanic soil. Tau moved
forward, his hands still upraised, clearly in greeting. That trunk
touched skyward as if in salute to the man who could be crushed
under one foot. “Hodi, eldama!” For the second time Tau
hailed the monster elephant and the trunk raised in silent greeting
from one lord of an earth to another he recognized as an equal.
Perhaps it had been a thousand years since man and elephant had
stood so, and then there had been only war and death between them.
Now there was peace and a current of power flowing from one to the
other. Dane sensed this, saw the men on the terrace likewise
drawing back from the unseen tie between the medic and the bull he
had so clearly summoned.
Then Tau’s upheld hands came together in a sharp clap and
men held their breath in wonder. Where the great bull had stood
there was nothing—except rocks in the sun.
As Tau swung around to face the cat-dog, that creature had no
substance either. For he fronted no animal but a man, a small, lean
man whose lips wrinkled back from his teeth in a snarl. His
attendant priests fell back, leaving the spaceman and the witch
doctor alone.
“Lumbrilo’s magic is great,” Tau said evenly.
“I hail Lumbrilo of Khatka.” His hand made the
open-palmed salute of peace.
The snarl faded as the man brought his face under control. He
stood naked, but he was clothed in inherit dignity. And there was
power with that dignity, power and a pride before which even the more physically impressive Chief Ranger might
have to give place.
“You have magic also, outlander,” he replied.
“Where walks this long-toothed shadow of yours
now?”
“Where once the men of Khatka walked, Lumbrilo. For it was
men of your blood who long, long past hunted this shadow of mine
and made its body their prey.”
“So that it now might have a blood debt to settle with us,
outlander?”
“That you said, not I, man of power. You have shown us one
beast, I have shown another. Who can say which of them is stronger
when it issues forth from the shadows?”
Lumbrilo pattered forward, his bare feet making little sound on
the stones of the terrace. Now he was only an arm’s-length
away from the medic.
“You have challenged me, off-world man.” Was that a
question or a statement? Dane wondered.
“Why should I challenge you, Lumbrilo? To each race its
own magic. I come not to offer battle.” His eyes
held steady with the Khatkan’s.
“You have challenged me.” Lumbrilo turned away and
then looked back over his shoulder. “The strength you depend
upon may become a broken staff, off-worlder. Remember my
words in the time when shadows become substance, and substance the
thinnest of shadows!”